Long‐term outcomes of early reading intervention

Bibliographic Data

Author(s)
Hurry, J., & Sylva, K.
Year of Study
2007
This study explores the long‐term effectiveness of two differing models of early intervention for children with reading difficulties: Reading Recovery and a specific phonological training. Approximately 400 children were pre‐tested, 95 were assigned to Reading Recovery, 97 to Phonological Training and the remainder acted as controls. In the short and medium term both interventions significantly improved aspects of children's reading, Reading Recovery having a broader and more powerful effect. In the long‐term, 3½ years after intervention, there were no significant effects on reading overall, though Reading Recovery had a significant effect for a subgroup of children who were complete non‐readers at 6 years old. Phonological Training had a significant effect on spelling. The short and medium‐term effects demonstrate that it is possible substantially to reduce children's reading problems. The long‐term effects raise doubts about relying on early intervention alone

Research Design

Study Design
Quantitative
Methodology
Randomized Controlled Trial
Subject
Literacy
Grade Level(s)
1st Grade
Sample size
131
Effect Size
-0.12

Program Details

Program Evaluated

Reading Recovery and Phonological Training

Tutor Type
Teacher
Duration
31 weeks
Student-Tutor Ratio
Small group